Will the Paris-Dakar Rally Ever Return to Africa?

It may strike you as false advertising, but the world-famous test of endurance known as the Paris-Dakar rally or just the Dakar rally has not been held on the African continent since 2009. This cross-continental motorsports event across inhospitable terrain used to be between Paris and Dakar, Senegal at various times since its 1979 inception. The Sahara desert was the proving ground for one of the ultimate tests of man and machine. However, since 2009, it has been held in South America due to security concerns on the African continent:

The Paris-Dakar Rally was moved from Africa to South America in 2009 but
it is still called The Dakar Rally (or simply, Dakar). It is one of the
toughest rallies in the world. The South American trail is also tough
but does not reach the extremities in the Saharan desert. This year’s rally will start with a “prologue” in Buenos Aires in the
Argentinian capital, on the 2nd of February, go through the length of
the country and turn around in ,Uyuni, Bolivia on the 8th of January and
take another route into Argentina where it will end in Vila Carlos Pas,
Rosario, on January 16th. For cars, it will be a total of 9,583
gruelling kilometres.

This rally is unique. It is a race of extreme endurance of man and
machine, a modern day Odyssey. It is the ultimate physical and mental
test of man (and woman). Since the start of the rally, 69 people have
lost their lives as a direct result of the race. This is made up of 28
competitors and 41 non-competitors. The non-competitors who lost their
lives include the race founder, Thierry Sabine, 14 news journalists and
support crew, 4 spectators, 4 children, and 18 other unnamed spectators
and bystanders. The most common cause of death is collision. But
casualties have been few in recent years. Even so, Motorbike rider,
Michal Hernik, was found dead in mysterious circumstances in the 2015
race.

By 2000, the rally started to contend with terrorists in the African
desert. That year the participants were airlifted across some of the
more dangerous routes. That year’s race ended in Cairo. 2001 saw a woman
finishing top for the first time. Jutta Kleinschmidt from Germany won
in a Mitsubishi. In 2006, the race started in Portugal for the first
time. This was repeated in 2007.

The 2008 race was cancelled after the murder of four French citizens and
three Mauritanian soldiers in the days before the start of the race.
The French Foreign Affairs Ministry advised its citizens not to travel
to Mauritania since the country’s intelligence identified terrorist
threats aimed at the rally. The following year, 2009, the race was moved
to South America and Africa lost an important attention seeker to the
continent. Africa’s loss became South America’s gain.

Critics will see the rally as a neo-imperialist relic since African participants have been next to none during the event's history. Ditto for African automakers. Still, the move to South America is a bit saddening insofar as it reflects the deteriorating security conditions in the Sahara. Mind you, this was before ISIS allegedly gained allies in the desert regions of Africa.